Description

Book Synopsis
A highly original treatment of significant topics in African Studies and beyond: violence, colonialism, landscape, memory and religion. Suffering, the experience of violation brought on by an act of violence or violent circumstances, is omnipresent in today's world - if only indirectly through global media representation. Despite this apparent immediacy, understanding how a person makes sense of his or her suffering tends to be fragmentary and often elusive. This book examines this key question through the lens of rural Zimbabwe and a frontier area on the border with Mozambique. It shows how African women, men, and children fashioned their life-worlds in the face of conflict. Historian Heike Schmidt challenges the apparently inseparable twin pairing of Africa and suffering. Even in situations of great distress, she argues, individuals and groups may articulate their social desires and political ambitions, and reforge their identities - as long as the experience of violence is not one of sheer terror. She emphasizes the crucial role women, chiefs, and youths played in the renegotiation of a sense of belonging during different periods of time. Based on sustained fieldwork, Colonialism and Violence offers a compelling history of suffering in a smallvalley in Zimbabwe over the course of 150 years. Heike Schmidt is Lecturer in Modern History, University of Reading.

Trade Review
An admirable collection of accounts of the history of conflict and suffering that have been an almost constant feature of life for the Valley's inhabitants as long as anyone can remember. * INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS *

Table of Contents
Introduction Living on the Frontier: Opportunity and Danger Imagining Foreign Lands: Landscapes of Violence The Frontier Society Under Threat: Politicization and Militancy War Rages Hot: Insurgency and Counter-insurgency After Violence: Healing the Wounds of War Epilogue: Violence That Does Not Haunt

Colonialism and Violence in Zimbabwe: A History

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    A Hardback by Heike I. Schmidt

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      View other formats and editions of Colonialism and Violence in Zimbabwe: A History by Heike I. Schmidt

      Publisher: James Currey
      Publication Date: 21/02/2013
      ISBN13: 9781847010513, 978-1847010513
      ISBN10: 1847010512

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A highly original treatment of significant topics in African Studies and beyond: violence, colonialism, landscape, memory and religion. Suffering, the experience of violation brought on by an act of violence or violent circumstances, is omnipresent in today's world - if only indirectly through global media representation. Despite this apparent immediacy, understanding how a person makes sense of his or her suffering tends to be fragmentary and often elusive. This book examines this key question through the lens of rural Zimbabwe and a frontier area on the border with Mozambique. It shows how African women, men, and children fashioned their life-worlds in the face of conflict. Historian Heike Schmidt challenges the apparently inseparable twin pairing of Africa and suffering. Even in situations of great distress, she argues, individuals and groups may articulate their social desires and political ambitions, and reforge their identities - as long as the experience of violence is not one of sheer terror. She emphasizes the crucial role women, chiefs, and youths played in the renegotiation of a sense of belonging during different periods of time. Based on sustained fieldwork, Colonialism and Violence offers a compelling history of suffering in a smallvalley in Zimbabwe over the course of 150 years. Heike Schmidt is Lecturer in Modern History, University of Reading.

      Trade Review
      An admirable collection of accounts of the history of conflict and suffering that have been an almost constant feature of life for the Valley's inhabitants as long as anyone can remember. * INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Living on the Frontier: Opportunity and Danger Imagining Foreign Lands: Landscapes of Violence The Frontier Society Under Threat: Politicization and Militancy War Rages Hot: Insurgency and Counter-insurgency After Violence: Healing the Wounds of War Epilogue: Violence That Does Not Haunt

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